Did MJ really go against tougher competition?

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Re: Did MJ really go against tougher competition? 

Post#361 » by richboy » Sun Apr 2, 2017 5:43 pm

LeBird wrote:
mysticOscar wrote:
axeman23 wrote:Thats an example of EVERY era being better than Jordan's? 80's outstanding TEAM-BALL, and someone saying todays league, with the population explosion, relatively little expansion, and drastic improvements in sports science, diet, training methods and coaching (whether through individual brilliance or trial and error)? Wheres your example (among the dozens, apparently) of people talking up the 50's, 60's 70's and earlier, over Jordans championship error? Oh, thats right. There are none...



So MJ....the luckiest nba player, athlete, person...managed to be just born at the right time where his prime happened to be in a weak decade...between two strong eras.

That lucky son of a b**** also happened to get two draft that turned to be two of some the greatest role players that allowed Bulls to form one of the greatest teams.

That lucky son of a b**** just also happened to retire when Olajuwon rose up and take 2 chips.

Gosh some posters are just so oblivious of how they sound.


MJ was a GOAT level player but he clearly played in the easiest era in the last 4 decades. Someone had to, it was him. He played in a team that was only 2 games worse off without him, in a league where Ewing and some bums were title contenders.


That argument has been done and it is laughable. Really hit has been straight cherry picking of stats. The Bulls had a down regular season the last year before his first retirement. They still won the title. Winning all 3 games in Phoenix. The Bulls without Jordan won 55 games with a low SRS of 2.87. Two years prior they had a SRS of over 10. They overachieved in win total and didn't come close to winning a title without Jordan. The next year they were close to missing the playoffs until Jordan came back. Then the next year they were having the best season in league history. Like I said the Bulls averaged 66 wins the last 6 full Jordan years. Two years removed from having a SRS of 2.87 they were near 11.
"Talent is God-given. Be humble. Fame is man-given. Be grateful. Conceit is self-given. Be careful." John Wooden
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Re: Did MJ really go against tougher competition? 

Post#362 » by Pg81 » Sun Apr 2, 2017 6:04 pm

richboy wrote:
LeBird wrote:
mysticOscar wrote:

So MJ....the luckiest nba player, athlete, person...managed to be just born at the right time where his prime happened to be in a weak decade...between two strong eras.

That lucky son of a b**** also happened to get two draft that turned to be two of some the greatest role players that allowed Bulls to form one of the greatest teams.

That lucky son of a b**** just also happened to retire when Olajuwon rose up and take 2 chips.

Gosh some posters are just so oblivious of how they sound.


MJ was a GOAT level player but he clearly played in the easiest era in the last 4 decades. Someone had to, it was him. He played in a team that was only 2 games worse off without him, in a league where Ewing and some bums were title contenders.


That argument has been done and it is laughable. Really hit has been straight cherry picking of stats. The Bulls had a down regular season the last year before his first retirement. They still won the title. Winning all 3 games in Phoenix. The Bulls without Jordan won 55 games with a low SRS of 2.87. Two years prior they had a SRS of over 10. They overachieved in win total and didn't come close to winning a title without Jordan. The next year they were close to missing the playoffs until Jordan came back. Then the next year they were having the best season in league history. Like I said the Bulls averaged 66 wins the last 6 full Jordan years. Two years removed from having a SRS of 2.87 they were near 11.


Nice how you leave out that MJs bitchmove left a huge gaping hole at the sg position which they had to fill with that scrub Myers. If he would have had the decency and give them time to get a decent or at least servicable sg they would not have nearly dropped as much.
Also considering that they only dropped 2 games in the regular season and nearly went to the finals I dare say that SRS is clearly overrated.
If you're asking me who the Mavs best player is, I'd say Luka. A guy like Delon Wright probably rivals his impact though at this stage in his career. KP may as well if he gets his **** together.
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Re: Did MJ really go against tougher competition? 

Post#363 » by richboy » Sun Apr 2, 2017 9:29 pm

Pg81 wrote:
richboy wrote:
LeBird wrote:
MJ was a GOAT level player but he clearly played in the easiest era in the last 4 decades. Someone had to, it was him. He played in a team that was only 2 games worse off without him, in a league where Ewing and some bums were title contenders.


That argument has been done and it is laughable. Really hit has been straight cherry picking of stats. The Bulls had a down regular season the last year before his first retirement. They still won the title. Winning all 3 games in Phoenix. The Bulls without Jordan won 55 games with a low SRS of 2.87. Two years prior they had a SRS of over 10. They overachieved in win total and didn't come close to winning a title without Jordan. The next year they were close to missing the playoffs until Jordan came back. Then the next year they were having the best season in league history. Like I said the Bulls averaged 66 wins the last 6 full Jordan years. Two years removed from having a SRS of 2.87 they were near 11.


Nice how you leave out that MJs bitchmove left a huge gaping hole at the sg position which they had to fill with that scrub Myers. If he would have had the decency and give them time to get a decent or at least servicable sg they would not have nearly dropped as much.
Also considering that they only dropped 2 games in the regular season and nearly went to the finals I dare say that SRS is clearly overrated.


I'm not inside your brain so claiming I left something out when your probably the only one thinking about that. They didn't nearly go to the NBA finals. They lost in the conference semi finals.You need to back up a statement. You can't say well SRS is overrated because it doesn't back up my argument. Especially since anyone with eyes could see that team wasn't that good as previous years. As you complain lets not forget that team added Kukoc. Jordan didn't play with Toni until the return.

By SRS there is only 1 team that Lebron has played that is better than anyone Jordan played in the finals. That is the Warriors. At the same time Lebron's teams have performed far worse in the regular season. The only reason we talk about Lebron going to the finals this year is because the weakness of the East. Everybody that talks about how terrible the CAvs has been think they still will win the EAst. Right now Toronto leads the East with a 3.78 SRS The Wizards at 1.64 is barely in front of OKC. Whoever comes out of the East will be one of the worst teams to ever win the conference.
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Re: Did MJ really go against tougher competition? 

Post#364 » by tefactor » Sun Apr 2, 2017 11:44 pm

richboy wrote:The Bulls were not an amazingly talented team. Matter of fact after Jordan's 3rd title and they passed the Lakers and Celtics NBA legends backlashed that the Bulls were overrated. That it was just Jordan. Later on many argued that Pippen didn't belong on the 50 greatest list. That he made it because of TV and Jordan. If you replace Michael Jordan with Clyde Drexler what you have. Still a good team but not a dynasty.

The teams they faced in the West were far more talented. Phoenix was one of the most talented teams that didn't win a title in the 90s. Same with Seattle. Utah had 2 of the top 30 players in history and a good cast around them. Portland also one of the most talented teams that didn't win. The Lakers were really the only weak Western conference team.

Not sure why Lebron would play with more talent when in reality Lebron has played with the most talent since leaving Cleveland the first time.


Putting LeBron aside for a moment...

It's not like the Bulls *upset* the Blazers / Suns / Sonics / Jazz... The Bulls, with Jordan factored in, had every opportunity to win those series, should have been the odds on favorites... What the Bulls lacked in depth, they made up for in Jordan GOATness... But they were never in a situation with the odds stacked against them versus a team that was significantly better than them. I agree they went up against great teams but they were never outmatched. I'm not even sure they were ever even equaled -- which is what this thread is really wondering.

Whereas, some might argue, LeBron's teams sometimes were outmatched. For the record, I don't totally agree with that argument... but that would be the defense for LeBron. I think it's true for LeBron in 2007, 2008, 2010 and especially 2015. (And maybe upcoming 2017.) But that's it. I think Jordan was outmatched from 86-89. So that roughly evens out. So what we're left with is Jordan's 3 rings at the same age LeBron has 3 rings... but LeBron played on a few superteams and Jordan took a year and a half off. I'm a fan of LeBron and to me, Jordan is still clearly greater... if that's what all this fuss is about...

But I think this thread is actually more about a different point: Did the 90's Bulls ever come up against a team as great as they were and win?

I think the teams the Bulls played, while great, were still slightly lesser than a Jordan & Pippen (& Grant or Rodman) Bulls team. The closest were probably the Jazz but they couldn't push the Bulls to a game 7 even. The Rockets might have been closer but we'll never really know and I'm not even sold that the Rockets would have enough to beat Bulls... take them to a game 7, maybe. Once the 90's set in, the Bulls didn't have any teams to really rival their talent level. Whereas, for example, LeBron in 2017 looks to be up against a roster (Warriors) that's much better than his, if he can even make the Finals again... Other than the Pistons battles, when were the Bulls ever challenged with having to play a roster better than their own? Which is the ultimate challenge and if you pull that off, you really are invincible. Which is the other thing the OP of this thread was saying, it sometimes seems like Jordan obsessives are acting as if he could overcome any matchup and so that's gotta be the standard for everyone. When really, that's asking too much.

Because if it were true, that one player can overcome anything, he'd have scored 100 vs. Bird's Celtics and definitely got past the Bad Boys in the 80's... but the reality is that, in the NBA, at such a high level of ball, you're typically at the mercy of talent level matchups. And the Bulls were fortunate to be given Finals teams they could out in 5 or 6 games... I think the proof is in how history unfolds -- if for example the Jazz were really great enough to take down Bulls, they'd either have done it or at least pushed them to the edge in a game 7 and convinced us they were right there. Instead it's more like, the Jazz put up a good fight, yeah, but not enough and Bulls were clearly the better squad.

Ps. It's not... "replace Jordan with Drexler", it's more like, replace Jordan with another all-time great top 12 player... and you might still get 3 or 4 rings out of that. ...Also, take Pippen away from Bulls, if Bulls still win 6, then yes, Jordan is invincible. But that wouldn't happen, he would still need this non top 50 player who is merely a Hall of Famer...
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Re: Did MJ really go against tougher competition? 

Post#365 » by mysticOscar » Mon Apr 3, 2017 12:41 am

tefactor wrote:
richboy wrote:The Bulls were not an amazingly talented team. Matter of fact after Jordan's 3rd title and they passed the Lakers and Celtics NBA legends backlashed that the Bulls were overrated. That it was just Jordan. Later on many argued that Pippen didn't belong on the 50 greatest list. That he made it because of TV and Jordan. If you replace Michael Jordan with Clyde Drexler what you have. Still a good team but not a dynasty.

The teams they faced in the West were far more talented. Phoenix was one of the most talented teams that didn't win a title in the 90s. Same with Seattle. Utah had 2 of the top 30 players in history and a good cast around them. Portland also one of the most talented teams that didn't win. The Lakers were really the only weak Western conference team.

Not sure why Lebron would play with more talent when in reality Lebron has played with the most talent since leaving Cleveland the first time.


Putting LeBron aside for a moment...

It's not like the Bulls *upset* the Blazers / Suns / Sonics / Jazz... The Bulls, with Jordan factored in, had every opportunity to win those series, should have been the odds on favorites... What the Bulls lacked in depth, they made up for in Jordan GOATness... But they were never in a situation with the odds stacked against them versus a team that was significantly better than them. I agree they went up against great teams but they were never outmatched. I'm not even sure they were ever even equaled -- which is what this thread is really wondering.

Whereas, some might argue, LeBron's teams sometimes were outmatched. For the record, I don't totally agree with that argument... but that would be the defense for LeBron. I think it's true for LeBron in 2007, 2008, 2010 and especially 2015. (And maybe upcoming 2017.) But that's it. I think Jordan was outmatched from 86-89. So that roughly evens out. So what we're left with is Jordan's 3 rings at the same age LeBron has 3 rings... but LeBron played on a few superteams and Jordan took a year and a half off. I'm a fan of LeBron and to me, Jordan is still clearly greater... if that's what all this fuss is about...

But I think this thread is actually more about a different point: Did the 90's Bulls ever come up against a team as great as they were and win?

I think the teams the Bulls played, while great, were still slightly lesser than a Jordan & Pippen (& Grant or Rodman) Bulls team. The closest were probably the Jazz but they couldn't push the Bulls to a game 7 even. The Rockets might have been closer but we'll never really know and I'm not even sold that the Rockets would have enough to beat Bulls... take them to a game 7, maybe. Once the 90's set in, the Bulls didn't have any teams to really rival their talent level. Whereas, for example, LeBron in 2017 looks to be up against a roster (Warriors) that's much better than his, if he can even make the Finals again... Other than the Pistons battles, when were the Bulls ever challenged with having to play a roster better than their own? Which is the ultimate challenge and if you pull that off, you really are invincible. Which is the other thing the OP of this thread was saying, it sometimes seems like Jordan obsessives are acting as if he could overcome any matchup and so that's gotta be the standard for everyone. When really, that's asking too much.

Because if it were true, that one player can overcome anything, he'd have scored 100 vs. Bird's Celtics and definitely got past the Bad Boys in the 80's... but the reality is that, in the NBA, at such a high level of ball, you're typically at the mercy of talent level matchups. And the Bulls were fortunate to be given Finals teams they could out in 5 or 6 games... I think the proof is in how history unfolds -- if for example the Jazz were really great enough to take down Bulls, they'd either have done it or at least pushed them to the edge in a game 7 and convinced us they were right there. Instead it's more like, the Jazz put up a good fight, yeah, but not enough and Bulls were clearly the better squad.

Ps. It's not... "replace Jordan with Drexler", it's more like, replace Jordan with another all-time great top 12 player... and you might still get 3 or 4 rings out of that. ...Also, take Pippen away from Bulls, if Bulls still win 6, then yes, Jordan is invincible. But that wouldn't happen, he would still need this non top 50 player who is merely a Hall of Famer...


With Finals, there can be an argument that Jordan/Bulls in 90s were always favourite. But its not a knock on Jordan right? Its like knocking Bolt for not winning gold as under dog.

Also, yes Lebrons greatness willed his team last year to the championship...and all those other years...but if were gonna put microscope on Jordan...we should also put it on Lebron with those championships?

OKC - young and inexperienced
Spurs - lucky Spurs chocked and Ray Allen miraculous shot to save the series
Warriors - losing Draymond due to suspension changed momentum. Warriors were not same team in playoffs as rs

I mean for me...these excuses are just as bad as what ppl are using to downplay Jordans achievments and are unwarrented.

Lebron has played in a weaker conference than the Jordan/Bulls....so if the argument is Lebron has played tougher finals....we can also say Jordan hard tougher road to get to finals
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Re: Did MJ really go against tougher competition? 

Post#366 » by minami » Mon Apr 3, 2017 3:13 am

Pg81 wrote:
All lines are wrong but especially the one about that blazers team is horrible. Porter and kersey were nothing?


That was a great team.

Pg81 wrote:MJ would have never won 6 rings in the 80s or 2000s for example.

Celtics, Lakers, Isaiah AND Sixers 83, let´s not forget that team.
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Re: Did MJ really go against tougher competition? 

Post#367 » by Pg81 » Mon Apr 3, 2017 4:06 am

richboy wrote:
Pg81 wrote:
richboy wrote:
That argument has been done and it is laughable. Really hit has been straight cherry picking of stats. The Bulls had a down regular season the last year before his first retirement. They still won the title. Winning all 3 games in Phoenix. The Bulls without Jordan won 55 games with a low SRS of 2.87. Two years prior they had a SRS of over 10. They overachieved in win total and didn't come close to winning a title without Jordan. The next year they were close to missing the playoffs until Jordan came back. Then the next year they were having the best season in league history. Like I said the Bulls averaged 66 wins the last 6 full Jordan years. Two years removed from having a SRS of 2.87 they were near 11.


Nice how you leave out that MJs bitchmove left a huge gaping hole at the sg position which they had to fill with that scrub Myers. If he would have had the decency and give them time to get a decent or at least servicable sg they would not have nearly dropped as much.
Also considering that they only dropped 2 games in the regular season and nearly went to the finals I dare say that SRS is clearly overrated.


I'm not inside your brain so claiming I left something out when your probably the only one thinking about that. They didn't nearly go to the NBA finals. They lost in the conference semi finals.You need to back up a statement. You can't say well SRS is overrated because it doesn't back up my argument. Especially since anyone with eyes could see that team wasn't that good as previous years. As you complain lets not forget that team added Kukoc. Jordan didn't play with Toni until the return.

By SRS there is only 1 team that Lebron has played that is better than anyone Jordan played in the finals. That is the Warriors. At the same time Lebron's teams have performed far worse in the regular season. The only reason we talk about Lebron going to the finals this year is because the weakness of the East. Everybody that talks about how terrible the CAvs has been think they still will win the EAst. Right now Toronto leads the East with a 3.78 SRS The Wizards at 1.64 is barely in front of OKC. Whoever comes out of the East will be one of the worst teams to ever win the conference.


They were one bogus call from Hollins away to win it all in the east. The series went to game 7. How much closer do you want you them to get after losing their superstar and getting a scrub replacement? Pippen proved he could carry a team deep into the playoffs even without MJ and with a total scrub at sg. Give him one decent sg and they would have been title contenders.

SRS is a bad tool to compare between eras. It only tells you how teams do among each other in the year it is measured. So empty argument remains empty, but that is not surprising for the typical Jordan Jocker,
Heck you want to use SRS against LeBron? Here I can do the same against MJ: Bulls having such a high SRS proves how **** the rest of the competition was. Oh and I can also make the claim that your SRS just proves what we have been saying all along, that those 90s teams feasted upon the expansion teams.

You really want to go down that route and evaluate team strengths across eras solely on the basis of SRS? :lol:
If you're asking me who the Mavs best player is, I'd say Luka. A guy like Delon Wright probably rivals his impact though at this stage in his career. KP may as well if he gets his **** together.
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Re: Did MJ really go against tougher competition? 

Post#368 » by tefactor » Mon Apr 3, 2017 5:11 am

mysticOscar wrote:With Finals, there can be an argument that Jordan/Bulls in 90s were always favourite. But its not a knock on Jordan right? Its like knocking Bolt for not winning gold as under dog.


Yeah, to be clear, I don't mean to "knock" Jordan. He's the GOAT.

But we can question if his teams (with his talent factored in to the roster) ever went up against a team of equal talent. That's not a knock on Jordan, that's just being honest about the Bulls' fortunes. Which is what you're getting at below with your honest read of LeBron's victories....

mysticOscar wrote: Also, yes Lebrons greatness willed his team last year to the championship...and all those other years...but if were gonna put microscope on Jordan...we should also put it on Lebron with those championships?

OKC - young and inexperienced
Spurs - lucky Spurs chocked and Ray Allen miraculous shot to save the series
Warriors - losing Draymond due to suspension changed momentum. Warriors were not same team in playoffs as rs


I don't disagree. I think that's fair game. LeBron is very fortunate to have any rings. Which just proves the whole thing even more: Imagine he did have none and had just wasted away in Cleveland without them ever going through a rebuild to get the picks to acquire Kyrie and (through trade) Love? ... The best player of his generation would have no rings (or maybe one), proving all the more the necessity of having as strong a roster as the team you're up against. (Or at the least, having a legitimate sidekick.)

What's more damning than LeBron's good fortunes or struggle to get rings is just how he played in 2009, 2011 and 2014. In 2009 he played well but needed to be a bit better still... I feel like Jordan would have been able to break the 40+ ppg barrier in that series and get that series win... And in 2011, LeBron froze up and wasn't great, as we all know, cost a ring... In 2014, he needed to be superhuman but wasn't, once again showing he has a ceiling a little bit lower than Jordan's... (Jordan seemed to be able to have ATG series if it was called for.) If I was really making up excuses, I'd just not ignore all that and say LeBron had no chance in those years also. Instead, I hold him accountable. I also, on the other hand, don't ask him to do something impossible. I feel there were times when it was just about impossible for him to win. (2007, 2008, 2010, 2015 would be my picks for years I give the guy a break...)

mysticOscar wrote:I mean for me...these excuses are just as bad as what ppl are using to downplay Jordans achievments and are unwarrented.

Lebron has played in a weaker conference than the Jordan/Bulls....so if the argument is Lebron has played tougher finals....we can also say Jordan hard tougher road to get to finals


Jordan did have a tougher overall road to the Finals, on average. So you can say that, for sure. The East was stronger in his era. Not disputing that.

LeBron had tougher Finals according to a bunch of SRS ratings I looked up on Basketball Reference... (Maybe I'm doing it wrong because another poster seemed to think Jordan's teams were all ranked higher... ?) But that's just SRS, just an abstract stat... There's also gut feelings about the teams and I do feel LeBron has had the tougher Finals matchups. ...But not by a lot, so I can understand the counter-arguments...

As for the problem of "making excuses"... well, I'd do it for any player who I thought deserved it. Like Barkley for example. Never won a ring but was better than some other great players who did. His rosters while great weren't quite great enough. Same is true for Durant before he joined the Warriors. ...I think it's even more obvious with LeBron because nobody is going to nominate those non-2016 Cavs rosters he was on as one of the ATG rosters... And I think it's true of Jordan's 86-89 teams also. So even Jordan benefits from a little excusing... I'd say it's become common practice. Case in point maybe, T-Mac just made the hall of fame without ever advancing past round 1. Why? Because in 2017 people know, playoffs are a team thing more than a star thing. A great star can only take you so far... Kobe is another example, I think in 2006, 2007, 2008 and 2012 he just ran up against a better team. I don't think he failed in those years.

That's an idea Jordan fanatics seem to have a hard time with. But if their 90's Bulls had come up against another ATG team and lost, or say Pippen went down with injury and Jordan was left shouldering it all for the Bulls in one of those Finals series, maybe then Jordan diehards would be more willing to rethink a player like LeBron's situation (why he doesn't have 4 or 5 rings by now)... Really though, Jordan's fans should already understand because, as I said, Jordan himself went through something similar from 86-89... When Jordan came up against a superior team to his like the Pistons, he lost (three out of 4 times anyway)... So LeBron should be extended the same understanding.

That's what frustrates me anyway, not so much who went through tougher competition or not, because we know Jordan did overall... again, he is the GOAT, I'm not arguing that or holding anything against him, I'm just defending others... Because there's this impression I sometimes get from the Jordan maniacs, or LeBron doubters, when judging LeBron, or Wilt too... people act as if there is no situation where the individual player can't win it all if they're great enough. I think that idea comes from the Bulls' aura of invincibility because 6/6 when in fact it wasn't like they were beating the Showtime Lakers or Big 3 80's Celtics year in and year out. They were beating teams that were lesser or at most equal to them. (And I'd lean towards lesser...) Even Jordan might not be able to overcome every situation. So why should players not as great as him (LeBron, Wilt) be asked to too? And I feel like they are. I feel like there's a lack of sympathy out there for their team situations / matchups, in certain years, against greater teams. It's just dismissed, as you put it, as "unwarranted excuses"... Yes, sometimes players just plain fail. Other times, they never had a real hope to begin with.

Ps. And if it's Warriors-Cavs again this year, it'll be another perfect example.
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Re: Did MJ really go against tougher competition? 

Post#369 » by LeBird » Mon Apr 3, 2017 5:13 am

richboy wrote:
That argument has been done and it is laughable. Really hit has been straight cherry picking of stats. The Bulls had a down regular season the last year before his first retirement. They still won the title. Winning all 3 games in Phoenix. The Bulls without Jordan won 55 games with a low SRS of 2.87. Two years prior they had a SRS of over 10. They overachieved in win total and didn't come close to winning a title without Jordan. The next year they were close to missing the playoffs until Jordan came back. Then the next year they were having the best season in league history. Like I said the Bulls averaged 66 wins the last 6 full Jordan years. Two years removed from having a SRS of 2.87 they were near 11.


The bolded and the irony, delicious again. SRS doesn't prove anything, you do know that right? It's a flawed stat, just like PER and basically every other stat. The win-loss column is the most powerful stat and it also determines everything else. And this is not some contextual out of pocket analysis. The very next year, despite the fact that Jordan pulled out the way he did, they won 2 games less - mind you, with injuries to important players like Pippen which would have improved their record - and a bad call away from going on and winning the whole thing.

And guess what? Whether they were better with Jordan - which is hardly in dispute - doesn't dispel the fact that the opposition was poorer compared to other eras, such as the current one.
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Re: Did MJ really go against tougher competition? 

Post#370 » by LeBird » Mon Apr 3, 2017 5:16 am

richboy wrote:
Completely disagree. The Bulls were not an amazingly talented team. Matter of fact after Jordan's 3rd title and they passed the Lakers and Celtics NBA legends backlashed that the Bulls were overrated. That it was just Jordan. Later on many argued that Pippen didn't belong on the 50 greatest list. That he made it because of TV and Jordan. If you replace Michael Jordan with Clyde Drexler what you have. Still a good team but not a dynasty.

The teams they faced in the West were far more talented. Phoenix was one of the most talented teams that didn't win a title in the 90s. Same with Seattle. Utah had 2 of the top 30 players in history and a good cast around them. Portland also one of the most talented teams that didn't win. The Lakers were really the only weak Western conference team.

Not sure why Lebron would play with more talent when in reality Lebron has played with the most talent since leaving Cleveland the first time.


LOL @ backlashed. Even before Jordan won a title the rest of the league (allowing with Bird and Magic) were hyping Jordan up purely because of Stern and the marketing push the league was undertaking to expand the popularity of the league.

How many cockamamie theories do you have? Let's get to reality: the 80s teams got old/injured, expansion diluted the league, and Jordan had a team that could contend for the title without him, nevermind with him; whereas if 1 of the stars of his opposition were taken out of consideration they would have trouble making the playoffs.

If LeBron goes to Spurs or GSW, he'd have more talent than he's ever had. If he went to several others like the Rockets or Clippers he'd have more or less what he has now. Meanwhile, Durant (top 3 player in the league) gets injured and his team still win go #1 and probably win the chip. And you're talking about Portland, Seattle and Phoenix...there isn't an emoji to describe how laughable this is :lol:
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Re: Did MJ really go against tougher competition? 

Post#371 » by Mulhollanddrive » Mon Apr 3, 2017 6:32 am

Isn't this thread about his opponents not him.
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Re: Did MJ really go against tougher competition? 

Post#372 » by mysticOscar » Mon Apr 3, 2017 8:32 am

tefactor wrote:
mysticOscar wrote:With Finals, there can be an argument that Jordan/Bulls in 90s were always favourite. But its not a knock on Jordan right? Its like knocking Bolt for not winning gold as under dog.


Yeah, to be clear, I don't mean to "knock" Jordan. He's the GOAT.

But we can question if his teams (with his talent factored in to the roster) ever went up against a team of equal talent. That's not a knock on Jordan, that's just being honest about the Bulls' fortunes. Which is what you're getting at below with your honest read of LeBron's victories....

mysticOscar wrote: Also, yes Lebrons greatness willed his team last year to the championship...and all those other years...but if were gonna put microscope on Jordan...we should also put it on Lebron with those championships?

OKC - young and inexperienced
Spurs - lucky Spurs chocked and Ray Allen miraculous shot to save the series
Warriors - losing Draymond due to suspension changed momentum. Warriors were not same team in playoffs as rs


I don't disagree. I think that's fair game. LeBron is very fortunate to have any rings. Which just proves the whole thing even more: Imagine he did have none and had just wasted away in Cleveland without them ever going through a rebuild to get the picks to acquire Kyrie and (through trade) Love? ... The best player of his generation would have no rings (or maybe one), proving all the more the necessity of having as strong a roster as the team you're up against. (Or at the least, having a legitimate sidekick.)

What's more damning than LeBron's good fortunes or struggle to get rings is just how he played in 2009, 2011 and 2014. In 2009 he played well but needed to be a bit better still... I feel like Jordan would have been able to break the 40+ ppg barrier in that series and get that series win... And in 2011, LeBron froze up and wasn't great, as we all know, cost a ring... In 2014, he needed to be superhuman but wasn't, once again showing he has a ceiling a little bit lower than Jordan's... (Jordan seemed to be able to have ATG series if it was called for.) If I was really making up excuses, I'd just not ignore all that and say LeBron had no chance in those years also. Instead, I hold him accountable. I also, on the other hand, don't ask him to do something impossible. I feel there were times when it was just about impossible for him to win. (2007, 2008, 2010, 2015 would be my picks for years I give the guy a break...)

mysticOscar wrote:I mean for me...these excuses are just as bad as what ppl are using to downplay Jordans achievments and are unwarrented.

Lebron has played in a weaker conference than the Jordan/Bulls....so if the argument is Lebron has played tougher finals....we can also say Jordan hard tougher road to get to finals


Jordan did have a tougher overall road to the Finals, on average. So you can say that, for sure. The East was stronger in his era. Not disputing that.

LeBron had tougher Finals according to a bunch of SRS ratings I looked up on Basketball Reference... (Maybe I'm doing it wrong because another poster seemed to think Jordan's teams were all ranked higher... ?) But that's just SRS, just an abstract stat... There's also gut feelings about the teams and I do feel LeBron has had the tougher Finals matchups. ...But not by a lot, so I can understand the counter-arguments...

As for the problem of "making excuses"... well, I'd do it for any player who I thought deserved it. Like Barkley for example. Never won a ring but was better than some other great players who did. His rosters while great weren't quite great enough. Same is true for Durant before he joined the Warriors. ...I think it's even more obvious with LeBron because nobody is going to nominate those non-2016 Cavs rosters he was on as one of the ATG rosters... And I think it's true of Jordan's 86-89 teams also. So even Jordan benefits from a little excusing... I'd say it's become common practice. Case in point maybe, T-Mac just made the hall of fame without ever advancing past round 1. Why? Because in 2017 people know, playoffs are a team thing more than a star thing. A great star can only take you so far... Kobe is another example, I think in 2006, 2007, 2008 and 2012 he just ran up against a better team. I don't think he failed in those years.

That's an idea Jordan fanatics seem to have a hard time with. But if their 90's Bulls had come up against another ATG team and lost, or say Pippen went down with injury and Jordan was left shouldering it all for the Bulls in one of those Finals series, maybe then Jordan diehards would be more willing to rethink a player like LeBron's situation (why he doesn't have 4 or 5 rings by now)... Really though, Jordan's fans should already understand because, as I said, Jordan himself went through something similar from 86-89... When Jordan came up against a superior team to his like the Pistons, he lost (three out of 4 times anyway)... So LeBron should be extended the same understanding.

That's what frustrates me anyway, not so much who went through tougher competition or not, because we know Jordan did overall... again, he is the GOAT, I'm not arguing that or holding anything against him, I'm just defending others... Because there's this impression I sometimes get from the Jordan maniacs, or LeBron doubters, when judging LeBron, or Wilt too... people act as if there is no situation where the individual player can't win it all if they're great enough. I think that idea comes from the Bulls' aura of invincibility because 6/6 when in fact it wasn't like they were beating the Showtime Lakers or Big 3 80's Celtics year in and year out. They were beating teams that were lesser or at most equal to them. (And I'd lean towards lesser...) Even Jordan might not be able to overcome every situation. So why should players not as great as him (LeBron, Wilt) be asked to too? And I feel like they are. I feel like there's a lack of sympathy out there for their team situations / matchups, in certain years, against greater teams. It's just dismissed, as you put it, as "unwarranted excuses"... Yes, sometimes players just plain fail. Other times, they never had a real hope to begin with.

Ps. And if it's Warriors-Cavs again this year, it'll be another perfect example.


I dont have much qualms with what you have posted. You have your opinions and it all seems reasonable enough.

Just have a few things for u to ponder about:

>how much credit do we give to Jordan, his playstyle, his drive, his competitive nature in cultivating Pippen, Grant and the rest of the Bulls?
I mean i know Jordans on/off court style wasnt for everyone (turned some players off)...but for the people that did resonate with MJ....do we give him credit? Much like Steve Jobs and Apple...how much credit do we give him? Was it just fortunate circumstances for Jobs? Jordan?.

> You mention on your previous post that replacing Jordan with a top 12 player and they would have still achieve 3-4 rings (based on a year sample where the team overshot there SRS). With the tragectory of team wins that Jordan had from his 1st yr to Pippens rookie and 2nd year (considering Jordan was injured for most of his 2nd year).....if we replace Pippen and even also Grant.....how many rings would Jordan have got still? Was Pippen and Grant really that irreplaceable?

>if a player you see was a GOAT player (as you admitted)...does it then become a surprise that he managed to get 6 rings?

>Every great player who didnt win a ring will have an excuse (legitimate or not)...but where do we draw the line? I mean im sure i can come up with a line of legitimate excuses and unfortunate circumstances why i didnt make it to the NBA and became a GOAT at this sport (exxagerated example i know). But where is that line? Do we just use excuses for the players that didnt quite cross the line? And not give any credit to Jordan for achieving it?
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MAJOR EXPANSION = MAJOR DILUTION = MORE "GREAT" TOP TEAMS 

Post#373 » by Pablo Novi » Mon Apr 3, 2017 3:41 pm

MAJOR EXPANSION = MAJOR DILUTION = MORE "GREAT" TOP TEAMS

To anyone who would even try to deny this impossible-to-deny statement; your (pro-MJ) bias has you blinded completely.

It can NOT be otherwise. Take any endeavor (NBA, other sport, any business, etc) - with the same number of people spread over more teams - the average team is WEAKER; and the expansion teams are horrible (BY DESIGN in the NBA). PLUS you have a necessary influx of additional players (to fill out all the rosters); ALL of which players who would not even be in the League otherwise!

During the 8 years of the 6 MJ-Bulls' Chips, the NBA expanded by 26.1%. (More than a quarter).

In the expansion periods PRIOR to the 1990s, the inevitable happened: the average W-L record of the rest of the teams got better.

IF there had been a similar (26+% increase in number of teams = EIGHT NEW TEAMS) expansion period in the 2000s or in the 2010s - the same EXACT thing would have happened again. It is not even possible for it to NOT happen - because the expansion teams get their players from the already-existing teams BUT don't get to take any of their top 3 players).

THE DILUTION-POWER OF EXPANSION ERAS.
I don't know how any person thinking objectively can disagree with: SIGNIFICANT EXPANSION = SIGNIFICANT DILUTION.

What you ALWAYS get when you have expansion (given that the League does not let the expansion teams be of average-competitiveness) is:
a) ALL the other teams average better records (for the first 3-4 years)
b) The TOP teams benefit the most (their squads got diminished the least; they win more % of their games)

THIS explains why it APPEARS that the 1990s was the NBA's "Golden Era" - again, the top teams won more games those years than usual - because it is AUTOMATIC that they do so - all the non-expansion teams win more games than otherwise; and the best teams benefit the most).
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Re: Did MJ really go against tougher competition? 

Post#374 » by tefactor » Mon Apr 3, 2017 6:25 pm

mysticOscar wrote:I dont have much qualms with what you have posted. You have your opinions and it all seems reasonable enough.


Thank you and respect. You seem reasonable enough yourself. And you're asking good questions...

mysticOscar wrote:>how much credit do we give to Jordan, his playstyle, his drive, his competitive nature in cultivating Pippen, Grant and the rest of the Bulls?
I mean i know Jordans on/off court style wasnt for everyone (turned some players off)...but for the people that did resonate with MJ....do we give him credit? Much like Steve Jobs and Apple...how much credit do we give him? Was it just fortunate circumstances for Jobs? Jordan?.


I wish I had something smart to say about Jobs but all I know is the movie they made about him... ...So I'll stick to basketball... Jordan's playstyle? Superior to LeBron's anyway. Why? A few things but primarily that Jordan has that killer midrange game whereas LeBron's jumper is just alright. I know LeBron is more of a slasher/facilitator, so it's a different approach, I still think Jordan is more effective because while LeBron labors to always get into the paint or playmake like an oversized PG, Jordan can simply get "easy" buckets (or buckets he makes look easy because he put so much practice into his shooting game) in those mid range sweet spots... That's my interpretation anyway, I'm sure somebody will now tell me "but LeBron plays the team game!" or something like that. If LeBron could score like Jordan and average those assists, then he really would be the GOAT. But he can't...

And Jordan's commitment, intensity, drive, competitive nature, whatever you wanna call it, it set the tone for the Bulls culture during the 90's... I think MJ does deserve credit for helping cultivate Pippen, Grant and crew. I think MJ's leadership deserves a lot of credit. MJ was no nonsense out there... but not like a... brooding, overly serious no nonsense either. Just the right focus, with a bit of passion for the game evident at all times. I really think that's one of the most admirable things about him actually, part of why he's the GOAT, he had such a mature demeanor and quietly magnetic persona. He had "it."

mysticOscar wrote:> You mention on your previous post that replacing Jordan with a top 12 player and they would have still achieve 3-4 rings (based on a year sample where the team overshot there SRS). With the tragectory of team wins that Jordan had from his 1st yr to Pippens rookie and 2nd year (considering Jordan was injured for most of his 2nd year).....if we replace Pippen and even also Grant.....how many rings would Jordan have got still? Was Pippen and Grant really that irreplaceable?


Complicated question.

So part 1: Grant and Pippen were both replaceable in theory. In reality, I don't know who would have replaced them? (Who did you have in mind to replace them?) But I guess what you're saying is, Grant was just a role player and Pippen may have been great, a Hall of Famer, but he wasn't like Drexler great... or like if you had Gary Payton as a sidekick or something like that. Those guys would be irreplaceable to how much success you had and Bulls would have even more success in that scenario, if that's even possible...

So part 2: Or, are you asking what happens if Jordan is left alone without a Pippen? I think Jordan is *worth* at least three rings... just all by himself... but in cruel reality would have only got 1 or 2 by himself. One for sure in 1991. (His series with Pistons and Lakers would have just taken longer to wrap up.) And maybe another one (a one-man upset of Sonics maybe) somewhere along the way... and the Suns series would be a close toss up based on how Jordan was able to perform at that time... But anyway, 2 or 3... but deserving of 3 or 4. ...I think 4 rings (or 4 Finals MVPs) is enough to have an argument that you're the GOAT. If Jordan and Pippen had only won, say, 4 rings, I'd still say Jordan is the GOAT... But Jordan and Pippen won another two titles for overkill purposes and more importantly, Jordan was still winning MVPs at that older age. So a guy like LeBron's got a lot to live up to these next few years...

Part 3: I expect the GOAT, with sufficient enough help, to be able to get about 4 rings / Finals MVPs. Why 4? Because you gotta have more than 3 Finals MVPs to separate yourself from the pack. (Currently there is a 4 way tie for 3 Finals MVPs.) So... with superior help (say Jordan had Barkley or the Mailman on his team), I expect more than 4 in that situation, I'd expect 6 rings. (And again, at least 4 Finals MVPs... But 6 rings, if you're the GOAT and have superior help for 6-10 years.) But Jordan had a less-than-upper-tier great player for his sidekick and he still got 6 anyway! It's the kind of thing that makes you go hmm... now how did that happen?

And then we come two conclusions... 1) It's because he's the GOAT. (Although I kinda think you can just tell this from watching enough of him.) And conclusion 2) This thread with its argument that Jordan never played a team that could truly challenge him. ...Both statements can be true at the same time...

mysticOscar wrote:>if a player you see was a GOAT player (as you admitted)...does it then become a surprise that he managed to get 6 rings?


No, it doesn't surprise me but here's why it doesn't: Like I said above, they had no team that was their equal. That's why it doesn't surprise me. If they did face a team to rival them in the 90's... and they still got 6... then that would be truly surprising. I would stand in awe of that accomplishment. And I'm not saying Jordan wasn't capable of it, I just don't find it likely. If there was really a team of comparable talent, Bulls probably would have lost at least one ring to them. And it would prove nothing about Jordan, but it would prove the Bulls weren't invincible... That all teams win ring totals relative to their competition's talent levels.

mysticOscar wrote: >Every great player who didnt win a ring will have an excuse (legitimate or not)...but where do we draw the line? I mean im sure i can come up with a line of legitimate excuses and unfortunate circumstances why i didnt make it to the NBA and became a GOAT at this sport (exxagerated example i know). But where is that line? Do we just use excuses for the players that didnt quite cross the line? And not give any credit to Jordan for achieving it?


I agree it's not an exact science. I hear your concerns. What you see as "excuses" though, I see more as simply providing context... as is only fair when assessing a player overall... Here's where I draw the line with LeBron: Context for 2015 is he was left shouldering all the burden against a great team. That's a year he gets a pass, benefit of the doubt. Doesn't mean he gets a "would-be championship" or anything like that. No, he still lost and that's that. But in evaluating him individually as a player, I don't hold the lack of a championship that year against him. Whereas I *do* in 2011 and 2014 because those were winnable series if he performs at a level of greatness in 2011 and a level of all-time greatness in 2014... I also think 2009 he could have at least made it to the Finals if he has a Jordan-like 43 ppg playoff series. But he came up a bit short. So I hold him accountable for those tough losses, too. But if he's playing on a roster hit hard by injuries and it's a roster that a year wasn't even in the playoffs? Then yeah, that Finals he was outmatched... I don't think the line is arbitrary, if that's what you feel, there's some reasoning behind it. So that's how we draw the line... we make our arguments and may the best argument win... and if you disagree with anything I just said there, that's fine (and ah well I tried)...

Looking at other players, for additional examples, Barkley and Malone no rings, to me they're both worth 1 ring at least, Malone maybe even 2... but it didn't happen, just too much competition in their time... Patrick Ewing, probably deserves a ring whole career considered (game 7s vs. Olajuwon and MJ)... Steve Nash, Dominique Wilkins, neither of those guys even made it to the Finals, but I'd say both are worth a ring. But it's arguable. But I'd say they're both a bit better than their trips to the Finals would suggest... Reggie Miller, more difficult case, but I'd be generous and say yeah throw him one too, because he played with the "heart of a champion"... Pretty much if you were a great player or ever came close to winning, I assume you were capable of winning a ring. But didn't because... "the NBA -- where circumstances happen." And it's up to us fans to be able to properly rank players not only based on rings but also on those circumstances. (However, it'll obviously be easier to make a case for a player who does have rings.)

As for not giving any credit to Jordan for his achievements... Hey man, I said he's the GOAT what more do ya want?... Is there some weird Jordan worshiping religion where it's a sin to even suggest that rings aren't the full picture? If so, that's the kinda attitude us other posters are talking about -- Jordan worship actually making it so we can't even discuss what happened and why. Look, I just try to be fair. So to be fair to Jordan now... I said another top 12 player in their prime with Pippen & company, versus the competition of the 90's era, they likely would get multiple rings. I'm not sure if I exaggerated or not when I said they could get as many as 4... but, I feel like it would definitely be possible. 6, however, I'd imagine that's too much... Only Jordan could do that while working with merely Pippen, Grant/Rodman and other role players... I think that's a big part, maybe even the biggest part, of what makes him the GOAT. How instrumental he was to that Bulls squad. And to me, what I just said there, that's giving full credit.

Ps. The "94 team could have made Finals, so there Jordan overrated argument." It's only after three years of championship experience and Jordan and Jackson molding that team into a perennial contender. But I hear what they're saying, the team Jordan came back to was just waiting for him to step in and win them a few more rings, they could do it all but close the deal... Yeah I agree, so, when the closer comes back, they go 72-10, are at that time the greatest team ever. Makes sense to me. He takes him from potential Finalist to most dominant team ever seen at that time. That's the transformation level. And next two years they experience some burn out, so that's why they can't quite repeat the 72-10 feat, but do win a lot still and repeat the rings. None of that is possible without Jordan. Without Jordan, the later Bulls would just be a competitive team near the finish line, not a true contender. Now, if the argument is compare that with LeBron's rosters without him... There you may be onto something. But I would also counter, it says something too that LeBron (and coach) wasn't able to whip these rosters into winning ways, even without him... That they instead just collapsed in 2014, while he was still there even.
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Re: Did MJ really go against tougher competition? 

Post#375 » by richboy » Tue Apr 4, 2017 6:39 pm

Pg81 wrote:
richboy wrote:
Pg81 wrote:
Nice how you leave out that MJs bitchmove left a huge gaping hole at the sg position which they had to fill with that scrub Myers. If he would have had the decency and give them time to get a decent or at least servicable sg they would not have nearly dropped as much.
Also considering that they only dropped 2 games in the regular season and nearly went to the finals I dare say that SRS is clearly overrated.


I'm not inside your brain so claiming I left something out when your probably the only one thinking about that. They didn't nearly go to the NBA finals. They lost in the conference semi finals.You need to back up a statement. You can't say well SRS is overrated because it doesn't back up my argument. Especially since anyone with eyes could see that team wasn't that good as previous years. As you complain lets not forget that team added Kukoc. Jordan didn't play with Toni until the return.

By SRS there is only 1 team that Lebron has played that is better than anyone Jordan played in the finals. That is the Warriors. At the same time Lebron's teams have performed far worse in the regular season. The only reason we talk about Lebron going to the finals this year is because the weakness of the East. Everybody that talks about how terrible the CAvs has been think they still will win the EAst. Right now Toronto leads the East with a 3.78 SRS The Wizards at 1.64 is barely in front of OKC. Whoever comes out of the East will be one of the worst teams to ever win the conference.


They were one bogus call from Hollins away to win it all in the east. The series went to game 7. How much closer do you want you them to get after losing their superstar and getting a scrub replacement? Pippen proved he could carry a team deep into the playoffs even without MJ and with a total scrub at sg. Give him one decent sg and they would have been title contenders.

SRS is a bad tool to compare between eras. It only tells you how teams do among each other in the year it is measured. So empty argument remains empty, but that is not surprising for the typical Jordan Jocker,
Heck you want to use SRS against LeBron? Here I can do the same against MJ: Bulls having such a high SRS proves how **** the rest of the competition was. Oh and I can also make the claim that your SRS just proves what we have been saying all along, that those 90s teams feasted upon the expansion teams.

You really want to go down that route and evaluate team strengths across eras solely on the basis of SRS? :lol:


They were not 1 call away from winning the East. Not only was not only the Eastern Semi Finals. They would still have to beat the Pacers. That wasn't even the game deciding game. It is complete assumption and ignorance of the reality. The Knicks were better than the Bulls that entire year. The Bulls played game 7 and weren't close. We have no clue how the Knicks respond if they actual lose game 5. Just to remind the Pacers won game 3, 4, and 5 against the Knicks in the next round and NY in Indiana stepped it up and won game 6. The Bulls weren't close to game 7. It took a great shot in game 3 by Kukoc for them not to be down 0-3. Here we are years later saying they were that close to winning the East. Why you stop there? You have them winning games against the Knicks that didn't happen. You have them winning games against the Pacers in a series that never took place. The Knicks took the Rockets 7 games. Why not just say they were a Hollins call away from the championship?

Did you just say Jordan's Bulls are proof that the league was weak. Based on that argument any level of greatness is proof of lack of competition. In reality if what you said was true we would see multiple teams. When Jordan was not in the league the Bulls SRS was in the twos. Nobody was putting up historic SRS. It is only the Bulls having such high SRS.

You can evaluate teams whichever way you want. Right now your just making statements without proofing anything. You sound exactly like the Kobe fans that say well don't look at advanced metrics when talking about Kobe vs Lebron or Durant or Jordan. What we should do is say well I know Jordan played a team with Payton, Prime Kemp, Detlef, Hersey Hawkins, Sam Perkins and say well that team really wasn't that good. Based on what? A team with Barkley, Kevin Johnson, Dan Marjle with guys like Tom Chambers, Ainge, Duman, Cedric Ceballas coming of the bench and well that team wasn't that good. Yet Lebron can play OKC with young stars and Kendrick Perkins and Thabo in the starting lineup and say yeah that is a great team. That San Antonio a team that had previously lost 4 straight to the Thunder. This is not young prime Tim Duncan or Manu or Tony. These are old versions of themselves yet they should have beaten Miami twice. This is the OMG great Lebron win. Right now all I'm getting is well you a lover of Jordan. No I'm a lover of reality. Right now your giving me #alternativefacts.
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Re: Did MJ really go against tougher competition? 

Post#376 » by OsuCavsfan103 » Tue Apr 4, 2017 6:54 pm

Heck no. The NBA had stars like they do now, but the depth of the league was crap and watered down.
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Re: Did MJ really go against tougher competition? 

Post#377 » by richboy » Tue Apr 4, 2017 6:55 pm

LeBird wrote:
richboy wrote:
Completely disagree. The Bulls were not an amazingly talented team. Matter of fact after Jordan's 3rd title and they passed the Lakers and Celtics NBA legends backlashed that the Bulls were overrated. That it was just Jordan. Later on many argued that Pippen didn't belong on the 50 greatest list. That he made it because of TV and Jordan. If you replace Michael Jordan with Clyde Drexler what you have. Still a good team but not a dynasty.

The teams they faced in the West were far more talented. Phoenix was one of the most talented teams that didn't win a title in the 90s. Same with Seattle. Utah had 2 of the top 30 players in history and a good cast around them. Portland also one of the most talented teams that didn't win. The Lakers were really the only weak Western conference team.

Not sure why Lebron would play with more talent when in reality Lebron has played with the most talent since leaving Cleveland the first time.


LOL @ backlashed. Even before Jordan won a title the rest of the league (allowing with Bird and Magic) were hyping Jordan up purely because of Stern and the marketing push the league was undertaking to expand the popularity of the league.

How many cockamamie theories do you have? Let's get to reality: the 80s teams got old/injured, expansion diluted the league, and Jordan had a team that could contend for the title without him, nevermind with him; whereas if 1 of the stars of his opposition were taken out of consideration they would have trouble making the playoffs.

If LeBron goes to Spurs or GSW, he'd have more talent than he's ever had. If he went to several others like the Rockets or Clippers he'd have more or less what he has now. Meanwhile, Durant (top 3 player in the league) gets injured and his team still win go #1 and probably win the chip. And you're talking about Portland, Seattle and Phoenix...there isn't an emoji to describe how laughable this is :lol:


The Bulls were as much contenders without Jordan as the Celtics are right now. If you want to live in a world where a team outscores opponents by 3 points a game is now a contender then have fun with that. You have a lot of contenders in the league.

Bulls were 14th in offense the year without Jordan. Hey OKC Thunder your a contender. Mediocre offense and win a few games your a contender.

Wait shouldn't we be talking about why is a team with Pippen, Kukoc and Grant is outperforming a team with Lebron, Kyrie, and Love. Based on your argument seems like it is more Lebron vs Pippen than Lebron vs Jordan. Since the word contender is subjective. Pretty much anyone in a competitive series in the second round is a contender. The gap between contender and historically great team seems to be a pretty big gap. Lebron has been on zero historically great teams. Fair or not fair to say Pippen on the Heat equal 2 titles?
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Re: MAJOR EXPANSION = MAJOR DILUTION = MORE "GREAT" TOP TEAMS 

Post#378 » by richboy » Tue Apr 4, 2017 6:58 pm

Pablo Novi wrote:MAJOR EXPANSION = MAJOR DILUTION = MORE "GREAT" TOP TEAMS

To anyone who would even try to deny this impossible-to-deny statement; your (pro-MJ) bias has you blinded completely.

It can NOT be otherwise. Take any endeavor (NBA, other sport, any business, etc) - with the same number of people spread over more teams - the average team is WEAKER; and the expansion teams are horrible (BY DESIGN in the NBA). PLUS you have a necessary influx of additional players (to fill out all the rosters); ALL of which players who would not even be in the League otherwise!

During the 8 years of the 6 MJ-Bulls' Chips, the NBA expanded by 26.1%. (More than a quarter).

In the expansion periods PRIOR to the 1990s, the inevitable happened: the average W-L record of the rest of the teams got better.

IF there had been a similar (26+% increase in number of teams = EIGHT NEW TEAMS) expansion period in the 2000s or in the 2010s - the same EXACT thing would have happened again. It is not even possible for it to NOT happen - because the expansion teams get their players from the already-existing teams BUT don't get to take any of their top 3 players).

THE DILUTION-POWER OF EXPANSION ERAS.
I don't know how any person thinking objectively can disagree with: SIGNIFICANT EXPANSION = SIGNIFICANT DILUTION.

What you ALWAYS get when you have expansion (given that the League does not let the expansion teams be of average-competitiveness) is:
a) ALL the other teams average better records (for the first 3-4 years)
b) The TOP teams benefit the most (their squads got diminished the least; they win more % of their games)

THIS explains why it APPEARS that the 1990s was the NBA's "Golden Era" - again, the top teams won more games those years than usual - because it is AUTOMATIC that they do so - all the non-expansion teams win more games than otherwise; and the best teams benefit the most).


Need more because it seems like the Bulls are the only ones with these big win totals.
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Re: Did MJ really go against tougher competition? 

Post#379 » by richboy » Tue Apr 4, 2017 7:12 pm

LeBird wrote:
richboy wrote:
That argument has been done and it is laughable. Really hit has been straight cherry picking of stats. The Bulls had a down regular season the last year before his first retirement. They still won the title. Winning all 3 games in Phoenix. The Bulls without Jordan won 55 games with a low SRS of 2.87. Two years prior they had a SRS of over 10. They overachieved in win total and didn't come close to winning a title without Jordan. The next year they were close to missing the playoffs until Jordan came back. Then the next year they were having the best season in league history. Like I said the Bulls averaged 66 wins the last 6 full Jordan years. Two years removed from having a SRS of 2.87 they were near 11.


The bolded and the irony, delicious again. SRS doesn't prove anything, you do know that right? It's a flawed stat, just like PER and basically every other stat. The win-loss column is the most powerful stat and it also determines everything else. And this is not some contextual out of pocket analysis. The very next year, despite the fact that Jordan pulled out the way he did, they won 2 games less - mind you, with injuries to important players like Pippen which would have improved their record - and a bad call away from going on and winning the whole thing.

And guess what? Whether they were better with Jordan - which is hardly in dispute - doesn't dispel the fact that the opposition was poorer compared to other eras, such as the current one.


Your giving me an argument I don't think you believe. Right now you think Boston is as good Cleveland? If Wins and losses are the true measure the Celtics are as good if not better. Do you think last years Raptors were contenders and on the same level as the Cavs. Seriously who am I having a discussion with. Are you someone who thinks that 60 win Jeff Teague Hawk team was actually "contenders".
"Talent is God-given. Be humble. Fame is man-given. Be grateful. Conceit is self-given. Be careful." John Wooden
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Re: Did MJ really go against tougher competition? 

Post#380 » by LeBird » Tue Apr 4, 2017 7:52 pm

richboy wrote:Your giving me an argument I don't think you believe. Right now you think Boston is as good Cleveland? If Wins and losses are the true measure the Celtics are as good if not better. Do you think last years Raptors were contenders and on the same level as the Cavs. Seriously who am I having a discussion with. Are you someone who thinks that 60 win Jeff Teague Hawk team was actually "contenders".


Right now? Yes. In the playoffs, that's a different consideration. I am not saying wins and losses are the only gauge, I just treat them more seriously than SRS. What more, the Bulls team in question (without Jordan) also did well in the playoffs and bar a ridiculous call would have likely gone to the finals again, and maybe even won.

You didn't address what I said either. You can say Bulls with Jordan was much better than without; but the point was that the team was so good it could have challenged without him anyway. That's how garbage the rest of the league were in comparison, particularly to the eras before and after it. None of those teams Jordan faced in the finals would even be close to contending if you took off their star player. No depth in those teams.

richboy wrote:
The Bulls were as much contenders without Jordan as the Celtics are right now. If you want to live in a world where a team outscores opponents by 3 points a game is now a contender then have fun with that. You have a lot of contenders in the league.

Bulls were 14th in offense the year without Jordan. Hey OKC Thunder your a contender. Mediocre offense and win a few games your a contender.

Wait shouldn't we be talking about why is a team with Pippen, Kukoc and Grant is outperforming a team with Lebron, Kyrie, and Love. Based on your argument seems like it is more Lebron vs Pippen than Lebron vs Jordan. Since the word contender is subjective. Pretty much anyone in a competitive series in the second round is a contender. The gap between contender and historically great team seems to be a pretty big gap. Lebron has been on zero historically great teams. Fair or not fair to say Pippen on the Heat equal 2 titles?


Nonsense. The league is just that much tougher now. The Celtics aren't likely to beat the Cavs, or the 2 real contenders in the West.

The Jordan-less Bulls had enough of a team, led by Pippen, to push for the title legitimately. You will do anything but address the composition of the teams because you know yourself they were garbage in comparison to now. Take away the Bulls and none of those 90s teams are sniffing a title now. None of them are likely to even get to the finals.

The word contender is pretty simple: a team with a reasonable chance of winning the title. The Clippers don't have a reasonable chance, despite having the kind of team that would likely, at least, get to a finals in the 90s. The Spurs do, the Cavs do and GSW do. The others are outside chances. Pippen's Bulls were more than outside chances.

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